Nine Line Medevac Request
Study Material
from
JoeUser Forums
Line 1. Location of the pick-up site.
Grid coordinate preferred, landmarks if necessary. Information encrypted if transmitting in the clear.
Line 2. Radio frequency, call sign, and suffix.
Information encrypted if transmitting in the clear.
Line 3. Number of patients by precedence:
A - Urgent (w/in 2 hr)
B - Urgent Surgical (w/in 2 hr)
C - Priority (w/in 4 hr)
D - Routine (w/in 24 hr)
E - Convenience
Line 4. Special equipment required:
A - None
B - Hoist
C - Extraction equipment
D - Ventilator
Line 5. Number of patients by type:
A - Litter (L + #)
B - Ambulatory (A + #)
Line 6. Security at pick-up site:
N - No enemy troops in area
P - Possible enemy troops in area (approach with caution)
E - Enemy troops in area (approach with caution)
X - Enemy troops in area (armed escort required)
* In peacetime - number and types of wounds, injuries, and illnesses
Line 7. Method of marking pick-up site:
A - Panels (color)
B - Pyrotechnic signal
C - Smoke signal
D - None
E - Other
Line 8. Patient nationality and status:
A - US Military
B - US Civilian
C - Non-US Military
D - Non-US Civilian
E - EPW
Line 9. NBC Contamination:
N - Nuclear
B - Biological
C - Chemical
* In peacetime - terrain description of pick-up site
Line numbers 1 through 5 must always be transmitted during the initial contact with the evacuation unit. Lines 6 through 9 may be transmitted while the aircraft or vehicle is en route. Line numbers 1 through 5 must be transmitted in under 25 seconds.
It's necessary to get this out as fast as you can because of the nature of some of these injuries. It's important to encrypt the message as much as possible to prevent giving away information about your position and disposition to any enemy that might be listening in (you'd be surprised how common that is). This is an important skill not just for a squad RTO (radio-telephone operator) but for all soldiers, so they can take care of their battle buddies if they take rounds; it's a natural extension of being able to provide first aid to your buddy.
Interesting (okay, the blog that linked to the blog that linked to the blog that linked to this was interesting; the actual post if frickin' awesome and scary and sad) blog post I found while researching this is here.
Grid coordinate preferred, landmarks if necessary. Information encrypted if transmitting in the clear.
Line 2. Radio frequency, call sign, and suffix.
Information encrypted if transmitting in the clear.
Line 3. Number of patients by precedence:
A - Urgent (w/in 2 hr)
B - Urgent Surgical (w/in 2 hr)
C - Priority (w/in 4 hr)
D - Routine (w/in 24 hr)
E - Convenience
Line 4. Special equipment required:
A - None
B - Hoist
C - Extraction equipment
D - Ventilator
Line 5. Number of patients by type:
A - Litter (L + #)
B - Ambulatory (A + #)
Line 6. Security at pick-up site:
N - No enemy troops in area
P - Possible enemy troops in area (approach with caution)
E - Enemy troops in area (approach with caution)
X - Enemy troops in area (armed escort required)
* In peacetime - number and types of wounds, injuries, and illnesses
Line 7. Method of marking pick-up site:
A - Panels (color)
B - Pyrotechnic signal
C - Smoke signal
D - None
E - Other
Line 8. Patient nationality and status:
A - US Military
B - US Civilian
C - Non-US Military
D - Non-US Civilian
E - EPW
Line 9. NBC Contamination:
N - Nuclear
B - Biological
C - Chemical
* In peacetime - terrain description of pick-up site
Line numbers 1 through 5 must always be transmitted during the initial contact with the evacuation unit. Lines 6 through 9 may be transmitted while the aircraft or vehicle is en route. Line numbers 1 through 5 must be transmitted in under 25 seconds.
It's necessary to get this out as fast as you can because of the nature of some of these injuries. It's important to encrypt the message as much as possible to prevent giving away information about your position and disposition to any enemy that might be listening in (you'd be surprised how common that is). This is an important skill not just for a squad RTO (radio-telephone operator) but for all soldiers, so they can take care of their battle buddies if they take rounds; it's a natural extension of being able to provide first aid to your buddy.
Interesting (okay, the blog that linked to the blog that linked to the blog that linked to this was interesting; the actual post if frickin' awesome and scary and sad) blog post I found while researching this is here.
I'm embarassingly rusty on a lot of these skills, so this is part of a personal refresher. I was slotted to go to a CLS class a few weeks ago, but my last class's FTX (Field Training Exercise) was moved to the same week. But I know it's a personal weakness and I'm trying to be better about self-analysis and self-improvement.